Pfandbriefbank, Shareholders

Deutsche Pfandbriefbank Shareholders Back Management but Bite Back on Pay in Split AGM Vote

22.05.2026 - 16:32:03 | boerse-global.de

Shareholders at Deutsche Pfandbriefbank's AGM rejected the retrospective remuneration report by nearly 60%, despite reelecting management and supervisory boards with over 96% approval. US risk reduction progresses but Q1 profit slumps.

Deutsche Pfandbriefbank Shareholders Back Management but Bite Back on Pay in Split AGM Vote - Foto: über boerse-global.de
Deutsche Pfandbriefbank Shareholders Back Management but Bite Back on Pay in Split AGM Vote - Foto: über boerse-global.de

The annual general meeting of Deutsche Pfandbriefbank on 21 May 2026 delivered a decidedly mixed verdict. While the management and supervisory boards won near-unanimous re?election stamps of approval, shareholders delivered a rare public rebuke over executive compensation, rejecting the retrospective remuneration report by a margin of nearly 60%.

The discharge votes were resounding: the management board received roughly 97% of votes cast, the supervisory board about 96%, and the auditor was confirmed with 99.27% backing. Yet the discontent over pay was stark — a non?binding but unequivocal signal that investors remain uncomfortable with the gap between past remuneration structures and the bank's weak share?price performance.

Voting patterns reflect a forward?looking but wary shareholder base

While the new remuneration system for the management board was approved with 86% support, the rejection of the report covering the previous financial year underscores lingering frustration. The stock has lost around 14% since the start of 2026 and more than 35% over the past twelve months. The message from the floor was clear: investors are prepared to look ahead but will not let past misalignment slide without protest.

The AGM also ushered in supervisory board changes. Jan Kupfer was elected to the body, replacing Louis Hagen, who stepped down, and is expected to take the chair shortly. Gertraud Dirscherl joined as another fresh member. The new appointments signal a continued effort to refresh governance as the bank navigates its strategic overhaul.

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US risk reduction accelerates while Q1 profit takes a hit

Progress on the bank's most significant headache — its exposure to the US commercial real estate market — was a key talking point. Non?performing loans in that portfolio have been cut by around 30% to approximately €0.4 billion. The wider US book, valued at roughly €4.1 billion, is being wound down through asset sales, securitisations and loan maturities.

That clean?up comes at a cost. First?quarter pre?tax profit slumped to €6 million from €28 million a year earlier, with net profit at just €5 million. Operating income stood at €77 million. Management nonetheless reaffirmed its full?year guidance, betting that the rising contribution from European business will offset the drag.

New business volumes in the Real Estate Finance Solutions segment climbed almost 18% year?on?year to €1.3 billion in the first quarter. Meanwhile, the newly integrated Real Estate Investment Solutions (REIS) unit, launched at the start of 2026, chipped in roughly €11 million in operating earnings. CEO Kay Wolf is steering the bank toward a fee?based model anchored in European core markets, green loans and logistics properties. The common equity tier?1 ratio stood at 13.4%, providing a comfortable buffer.

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Regulator warns of fresh headwinds

The regulatory climate is a growing concern. Germany's BaFin warned in May of rising risks in commercial real estate lending, noting that in the fourth quarter of 2025 roughly one in seven new property loans had a loan?to?value ratio exceeding 100%. Separately, BaFin president Mark Branson highlighted the threat of AI?powered cyberattacks, which he said can quickly identify and exploit IT vulnerabilities. The authority has announced targeted IT inspections at financial institutions.

Analyst conviction remains intact

Despite the profit pressure, Warburg Research reiterated its buy recommendation on the stock with a price target of €5.50 — more than 50% above the current level. The shares changed hands at €3.52 after the AGM, a recovery of roughly 29% from the March low of €2.75 but well below the 52?week peak of €5.75. The stock is now trading about 13% above its 50?day moving average, suggesting some technical stabilisation. Whether the US wind?down can accelerate further will likely be the dominant factor shaping the share price in the months ahead.

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